| BEERHALL | • beerhall n. Alternative form of beer hall. • beer␣hall n. A large German public house that specialises in beer. • BEERHALL n. a large drinking place. |
| DORHAWKS | • dorhawks n. Plural of dorhawk. • DORHAWK n. (dialect) the nightjar. |
| FORHAILE | • FORHAILE v. (Spenser) to distract. |
| OVERHAIR | • overhair n. The long hair overlying the fur of many animals. • OVERHAIR n. fur covering of some animals. |
| OVERHALE | • overhale v. (Transitive) To draw or haul over; overhaul. • overhale v. (Transitive) To overcome. • OVERHALE v. (Spenser) to overtake, also OVERHAILE. |
| OVERHAND | • overhand adj. Executed with the hand brought forward and down from above the shoulders. • overhand adj. (Sewing) Sewn with close, vertical stitches that draw the edges of a seam together. • overhand adj. (Of a loop in rope) With the working part on top of the standing part. |
| OVERHANG | • overhang v. (Transitive) To hang over (something). • overhang v. (Intransitive) To impend. • overhang n. (Economics) The volume that tips the balance between the demand and the supply toward demand lagging supply. |
| OVERHARD | • overhard adj. Too hard. • over␣hard phr. (US) Of an egg prepared as food, fried on both sides all the way through, with the yolk intact. • OVERHARD adj. excessively hard. |
| OVERHATE | • overhate v. To hate excessively. • OVERHATE v. to hate to excess. |
| OVERHAUL | • overhaul n. A major repair, renovation, or revision. • overhaul n. (Firefighting) The process after the fire appears extinguished in which the firefighters search the… • overhaul v. To modernize, repair, renovate, or revise completely. |
| RHABDOID | • rhabdoid adj. Shaped like a rod. • rhabdoid n. A spindle-shaped body chemically related to the plastids, found in the cells of certain plants. • RHABDOID n. a rodlike body. |
| RHABDOME | • rhabdome n. In sponges, the shaft of a cladose rhabdus, bearing the cladome. • RHABDOME n. (Greek) a rodlike structure in the retinula, also RHABDOM. |
| RHABDOMS | • rhabdoms n. Plural of rhabdom. • RHABDOM n. (Greek) a rodlike structure in the retinula, also RHABDOME. |
| RHACHIAL | • RHACHIAL adj. pertaining to the spinal column. |
| RHAGADES | • rhagades n. Plural of rhagade. • RHAGADES n. (Greek) cracks in the skin. |
| RHAMNOSE | • rhamnose n. (Biochemistry) A methyl-pentose, 6-deoxy-L-mannose, which occurs in the leaves and flowers of poison… • RHAMNOSE n. a sugar found in plants. |
| RHAPHIDE | • rhaphide n. Alternative form of raphide. • RHAPHIDE n. a needlelike crystal, also RHAPHIS. |
| RHAPSODE | • rhapsode n. One who performs the poetry of a poet for an audience; not a writer of poetry. • rhapsode n. The interpreter of a poem. • RHAPSODE n. anciently, one who recited or composed a rhapsody; esp. one whose profession was to recite the verses of Homer and other epic poets, also RHAPSODIST. |
| RHAPSODY | • rhapsody n. (Ancient Greece, poetry, historical) An epic poem, or part of one, suitable for uninterrupted recitation. • rhapsody n. (By extension). • rhapsody v. Synonym of rhapsodize. |
| WARHABLE | • WARHABLE adj. (Spenser) fit for war. |